216 " , r ( --- \ _,' I 0 . /' .. - ';i :: ; ,( / .,. .. \t : .. .. % · Þ d _ J .., : .-. " -, _. .. ./ .: I J ; :;, " n " '4:: .: ,'; 1 '-." _ J A' .., ' . ........ ". __/ .: - - .', .- ...? , , Jf ' l#::, . · " \ :*:'.'... fit. . :: .:. · r ::: ;: ;:,:;.-:i:? '!: < .. . .:...: I .., *,-: i ; : :; : :! i ... : ß /" .! . /' 'J :. : r: .:. ........ .'_ JI':.j: .'.' , .... .;. .., \111. : --I :, . -: ::.::.. ., : - l. - -- o ÎW-e prefer--- them fussy! # I , '" t I . .. . \' \\ OrdinariI y a fussy customer means trouble (0 a businessman, but in the case of Miller High Life, fussy people are our best friends! They're sore of finicky about things like food and refreshment . . . and the fussier they are . . . well, the more they appreciate the distinctive flavor of our beer. No product of true quality can long survive without the trus( and confi- dence of particular people The ever increasing acceptance of Miller High Life has added strength to a brewing tradition that became famous in a royal castle in Europe . . . and has since grown right along with the rising standards of good living in America, THE POINT IS THIS: . We have created a beer in the world's finest brewery . , . a beer brewed for quality only . . . never for quantity. But it is your pride and good taste that ha kepr alive the grear rradition which today finds Miller High Life the accepted choice of parricular beer drinkers. No 'luonder 'lue prefer fussy people! @ MILLER BREWING CO., MILWAUKEE, WIS. Y The Champagne of Bottle Beer blanket. How could he tell him what it was like to be an old man and lIe awake nights listening to the agonized breathing of a son and wonder if with dawn he would stIll be alive? How could he hope to make the boy under- stand the terror of standing in the dark- ness and feeling the presence of crows tearing up the fields he had planted? Fear was a thing that had never been a part of the boy's life, and Perumal knew no words to make him under- stand. He seized J anu by the wrist. "1 forbid you to return the blanket," he said. "It is against my will." With a shrug, Janu pulled away, and in sudden anger Perumal reached out and struck him across the mouth. Never before had he u')ed force or harsh words wIth Janu, and the round, ques- tioning eyes that the boy turned to him now were full of tears. The old man trembled with remorse. "Ah, J anu, J anu, what have I done?" he said, fall- ing to his knees. "I didn't mean it. F or- give an old man his foolishness." But J anu, smarting from the slap and his father's anger, turned and left him kneeling by the shrine "You had no call to strike me," he saId bitterly. "Please," Perumal begged. "You are right, my son. I shouldn't have hit you. I have done wrong. Forgive me, I beg you. Take the blanket back, if you wish-only forgive me. Don't be angry with your foolish old father." J anu stood in silence by the lean-to, his back to the old man, the blanket in his arms. "Let us say no more about it," Peru- mal saId softly, mistaking the boy's silence for forgiveness. "Now, put the blanket away It is not fitting for us to be seen with it." " Wh d ,., ? " at 0 you mean, put It away , J anu asked. "Didn't you just say for me to take it back if I wished?" "Of course, of course. But all in good time" "Then why did you say 'put it away' ? " "It is already here What harm to keep it a little while?" The boy snorted. "All right, A ppa," he said, and swept past his father. He unfolded the blanket, shook it out, and started to hang it over a limb of the bo tree. "What are you doing?" Perumal asked. "Hanging up our new blanket," J anu said "But I told you to put it away." "You also said for me to take it back if I wished How am I to know what you mean?" He stepped back to look at DECEMDEI\ 1 , I 9 5 7 2 PERFS. EVERY SAT. & SUN. 2:30 & 8:30 "'" "DRAMATIC SMASH" -WALTER WINCHEll U ABSORBING.. . COMPELLING , AMERICAN DRAMA !'':''Cue t I MAIL ORDERS FILLED PROMPTLY. Tues. thru Sun, Eves. 8:30. Orch. $5.75, Mezz. $4.60, Balc. $3.45, $2.90, $2.30. Fri. & Sat. eves. Orch. $6.90, Mezz. $5.75, $4.60, Bale. $3.45. $2.90 2.30. Mats, Sat. & Sun. 2:30. Orch. $4.60, Mezz. $3.45, Balc. $2.90. $2.30, $1.75. No perfs. Mon. AMBASSADOR ...91h SI.. w. 01 ..".Y [B[st MUSICALs "ONE Of t" tUR !t AnINsoH.rll"ts OF THE eEl' EDWARD JUL.! MULHARE .ANDREWS IN THE CRITICS' PRIZE MUSICAL fÃ'Rk..OY wIth STANLEY HOLLOWAY REGINALD DENNY MARK HELLINGER, 51 St. W. of S'y Eves. 8:30. Mats. Wed. & Sat. 2:30 "GORGEOUS THEATRE!" -Atkin.on. N. Y. Timél <!f ff "" 0< Q, L _ '.... )P '.. " >" .'s . < : ."': .... . . - ,:/ '. --I , . -:'"<.Y' HELEN RICHARD SUSAN HA YES BURTON ST ASBERG TIME REMEMBERED MOROSCO, West 45. Eves. 8:40. fat8. Wed. & Sat "A SWEETHEART OF A MUSICAL" -Kerr, Herald.Tribune JUDY WOLLIDAY ellA ÎttlfÎhllf SHUBERT THEA., 225 W. 44 St. (I 6.5990 ENJOV I '-- .... - (- 3 TIMES A WEEK ALL YEAR "ROUND AT SAN JUAN 9 S W, III \'1 n \./ \'l m ' PUERTO RICO'S PRIDE s \J) GNi. 09 W. 50th, St., P Mon atS f 1)1. __-t' Q... .uA From. 11 · .rf_3470. Open r '\ '-' N .'f.C., CI t 4 p.M to 4 A.